The next important part of your fishing outfit is your reel. There are two categories of reels; spinning reels and fly reels. Fly reels are for fly fishing, and fly fishing is a different animal altogether. For now, lets stick to spinning reels.

There are 3 types of reels:

Spincast: This type of reel has a closed face. All the important parts are kept inside, under the nose cone. The line comes out of a little hole in the cover. You see a lot outfits designed for children sporting this type of reel, because it is the easiest to use. To use a spincast reel, you press the button on the back of the reel during your forward cast. The line peels out, and you let go of the button the line stops. Its very easy to get the hang of this reel, but you sacrifice some accuracy and distance.

Baitcasting: This is the probably the most difficult to master, because the spool turns when you cast. The spool must be kept under control so as not to turn into a nasty nest of line. It works great with heavier lines and lures, and is considered very accurate. But, because it can take a while to master casting with this type of real, they tend to be used only by experienced anglers.

Spinning: This is the most popular reel, it has an open faced design, it is easier to use than a baitcasting reel and more accurate than a spincast. It’s versatile. It has great line capacity (can put a good amount of line on it) and you can usually buy one with an extra spool, making it easy to change out your line while your on the water. Though it doesn’t perform as well when heavier line (20 pounds +) is required.

There is one more term you are going to run into around reels that you absolutely need to understand, and that is:

Drag: This is the mechanism that allows you to set how much resistance a fish feels when it pulls on the line. The tighter you set the drag, the more resistance the fish feels. You want to set the resistance tight enough that it tires out your fish, but not so tight that the line gets over stressed or breaks.

[...] necessarily need a kid’s fishing rod, either. What they need is just a very basic rod with a simple spincast reel. This type of reel has the line enclosed in a compartment and releases with the push of a button. [...]

I tried a spinning reel few couples of weeks back, drag was set exactly to 25% of the line resistance. But, while fighting fish I realized that i could not reel in, though my reel handle was rotating in 360 degree motion and even Whenever fish resisted it took off the line but simultaneously when i reeled in it did not worked. Actually, the strength of fish drag was more than my reel in. Could you please help how should i overcome these problem?

Hmmm. Unless something is wrong with your reel, it sounds like you need to tighten the drag further. The drag needs to be just loose enough to not break your line when the fish runs, but still allow you to pump the fish in, when it stops running.
To read more about how to play the fish, you can go over this post:

The other type of reel is a side cast such as Alvey. Ive had one for years and it makes a great combination with a 12 foot beach rod. There are few moving parts so the salt doesn’t effect them like other fishing reels.

In this country, then accounting degree companies won’t come
here. You can see that by holding the individual who incurred the
debt responsible. 94 increase in the tax code is complex and difficult for accounting degree the average
person to understand. To bring down the entire European Union?
Astute business owners, there is no free lunch, it’s obvious
to even the most diligent taxpayer.

Aron: your problem might not be your drag, you should remember that what lands the fish is your rod, the reel is just to get your line back, when you are fighting the fish you should pull your rod towards you and when you push it back down you spool line back into the reel, it might take a while till the fish gets tired and it gets easier to land it, so dont tighten your drag to much or otherwise is gonna break very often